Mediation fails again in hockey labor fight

Winnipeg Jets' Ron Hainsey, left, Vancouver Canucks' Manny Malhotra, second from left, and Pittsburgh Penguins' Sidney Crosby, second from right, listens as Don Fehr, right, executive director for the National Hockey League Players Associations, speaks to reporters on Thursday, Dec. 6, 2012, in New York. Talks in the NHL labor fight broke down after just one hour Thursday night, and it is not known when the league and the players' association would get back together. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

NEW YORK (AP) — Different location, different format, same old result in the ongoing fruitless NHL labor talks.

“All I am going to say is there wasn’t any change in position,” players’ association executive director Donald Fehr said Wednesday.

In what was expected to be the resumption of negotiations between the league and the players after talks fell apart last week, the sides got to the same location but never made it into the same room to work through their problems.

Federal mediators rejoined the conversation following two failed days last month, but still couldn’t achieve a breakthrough in this hockey labor fight. The mediators met separately with the NHL and the union and tried to bridge the gap Wednesday.

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It didn’t work.

“There were discussions of the various issues involved and how far apart we are and where we go from here,” Fehr said. “I can’t tell you that any progress was made.”

The latest round of talks were supposed to be held away from reporters and cameras, but the meeting location in suburban New Jersey was quickly revealed. Both sides briefly made public statements in frustrated tones when all was said and done.

No one put a positive spin on Wednesday’s developments and no one seemed to have any concrete idea what to do next to save the hockey season that continues to slip away.

Any hope negotiations could swiftly get back on track to the point they were last Thursday before things went south were quickly dashed.

“We did several different caucus meeting rooms, and really there’s nothing new to report,” NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly said on the 88th day of the league’s lockout. “We don’t have a conclusion to the process.”

When the NHL agreed last week to increase its make-whole offer of deferred payments from $211 million to $300 million it was part of a proposed package that required the union to agree on three nonnegotiable points. Instead, the players’ association accepted the raise in funds, but then made counterproposals on the issues the league stated had no wiggle room.

NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman then said that the offer was being pulled from the table. However, mediators asked the union on Wednesday, if that proposal was back in play, would the players take it or leave it?

“It wasn’t much of a decision,” said Brendan Morrison, one of 13 players to attend Wednesday’s talks. “I thought the gap would be closed much quicker, but it hasn’t come to fruition yet, so we have to keep working.”

The offer wasn’t actually resubmitted by the NHL. Neither side made any proposals Wednesday.

All games through Dec. 30 have been canceled, about 43 percent of the season, along with the New Year’s Day Winter Classic, and the All-Star game.

No new meetings have been scheduled. Whether mediators will remain in the process is uncertain.

After three straight days of talks between the sides ended last Thursday, Fehr began the first of his two news conferences by proclaiming he believed the sides had agreements on such issues as actual dollars, and then returned moments later to reveal the NHL rejected everything his side offered.

The 2004-05 season was lost completely, resulting in the players’ association accepting a deal that included a salary cap for the first time. While no such major philosophical disputes exist in these negotiations, the sides still aren’t ready to come to an agreement.

“I never thought the issues were as big as they were back in `04-05,” Morrison said Wednesday. “Apparently, I was wrong.”

A 48-game season was played in 1995 after a lockout stretched into January. Bettman said he wouldn’t have a season shorter than that.

The NHL wants to limit personal player contracts to five years, seven for a club to re-sign its own player, and has elevated the issue to the highest level of importance. The union countered with an offer of an eight-year maximum length with the variable in salary being no greater than a 25 percent difference between the highest-paid year of the deal and the lowest.

The other sticking points the NHL demanded of the players are a 10-year term on the new agreement, with a mutual opt-out option after eight years, and no compliance buyouts or caps on escrow in the transition phase to the new structure. The union presented an offer of an eight-year deal with a reopener after six.